Used appropriately, newer treatments can provide dramatic results faster and more safely than broad immunosuppressants. However, according to experts, payers’ willingness to cover costly new therapies remains a work in progress.
The availability of more effective treatments with fewer side effects has brought about a cultural shift, said James F. Howard, Jr, MD. “The physician’s goal now is for the patient to be symptom free with grade 1 or less adverse events. And patients are demanding freedom from all the side effects that our usual course of immune therapy produces.” Dr. Howard is professor of neurology, medicine and allied health and director of the Myasthenia Gravis Clinical Trials and Translational Research Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The shift has been long in coming. Although myasthenia gravis was identified in the mid-1600s, it took more than 340 years to get the first drug approved specifically for the disorder.
Worldwide prevalence estimates vary widely, from less than 200,000 to 700,000 cases.1,2 Pathophysiologically, myasthenia gravis stems from autoimmune destruction of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs), which transmit motor neuron impulses to muscle fibers.1 Symptoms include variable skeletal muscle weakness that can range from mild and transient to life-threatening.
In approximately 80% of cases, autoimmune antibodies target the postsynaptic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Additional autoimmune targets mainly include muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) and lipoprotein receptor-related protein 4 (LRP4). However, around 10% of patients are seronegative, lacking autoantibodies detectable through conventional radioimmunoassays. Clinical disease does not always correspond with circulating antibody levels, and pathogenesis may require cooperation between multiple autoantibodies attacking the same target.3 Around 10% of MG cases are associated with thymomas.
Among myasthenia gravis treatments, immunosuppressants typically take 4-10 months to begin working and 18-36 months for maximum benefit. “Our new targeted therapies work within 1-2 weeks, with maximum improvement occurring somewhere between 8 and 12 weeks,” Dr. Howard said. Quick onset makes these drugs well suited for primary therapy in recalcitrant myasthenia gravis or as bridges to standard immunotherapy. Targeted drugs also appear to provide effective rescue therapy, although head-to-head studies are needed.
Complement Inhibition
In AChR antibody–positive myasthenia gravis, autoantibody binding with the postsynaptic AChR receptor activates complement to attack postsynaptic neuronal membrane. Complement inhibitors approved to date block activation of the terminal complement protein C5.
For many patients, complement inhibitors deliver dramatic results. Henry J. Kaminski, MD, said that the first patient for whom he prescribed a complement inhibitor outside a clinical trial went from being miserable to traveling internationally within a month. Dr. Kaminski is Meta A. Neumann Professor of Neurology at George Washington University, Washington, DC.
Eculizumab (Soliris, Alexion), earned Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for myasthenia gravis in 2017. Week 26 results in the phase 3 REGAIN trial showed no significant difference in Myasthenia Gravis–Activities of Daily Living (MG-ADL) scores between treatment and placebo. However, said Dr. Howard, primary investigator on the study, the negative result was a statistical aberration stemming from the FDA’s requirement to use worst-rank analysis rather than absolute change scores. What got eculizumab approved were highly positive results in the overwhelming majority of secondary endpoints.4 Subsequently, the FDA had the manufacturer rewrite the package insert using common statistical methods, which yielded positive primary results.
Ravulizumab (Ultomiris, Alexion), approved for myasthenia gravis in 2022, reduces eculizumab’s twice-monthly intravenous dosing to every 2 months (after loading doses), with very similar efficacy. The newest complement inhibitor, zilucoplan (Zilbrysq, UCB), administered once daily subcutaneously, earned FDA approval in 2023. Daily subcutaneous dosing provides patient convenience, said Dr. Howard. Because the body does not clear this small molecule as it would a full-size antibody, it is the only complement inhibitor that can be combined with a fragment crystallizable neonatal receptor (FcRn) inhibitor.